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The Old Regime: the Three Estates

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Title: The Old Regime: the Three Estates


1
The Old Regime the Three Estates
  • Legally aristocratic and some ways feudal
  • Social and economic distinctions were obsolete
  • First estate- The Church-owned 5-10
  • Second estate-the nobility
  • Monopolized positions of influence
  • Great resurgence since death of Louis XIV(1715)
  • Blocked tax reform through parlement

2
Third Estate
  • Bourgeoisie, the upper crust grew in influence
    thanks to fivefold increase in foreign trade
    between 1713 and 1789
  • Common people as well off as most those in most
    countries but not compared to the upper classes
    as price of consumer goods rose at 65 but wages
    only 22, the gap between classes widened.

3
Collision of Interests
  • The Revolution was the collision of two moving
    objects, a rising aristocracy and a rising
    bourgeoisie. Palmer

4
Agrarian System
  • Peasants worked for themselves on their own land
    or rented land, or they hired themselves out to
    others
  • Manors still somewhat feudal
  • Hunting rights
  • Banalities
  • Seigneurial privileges
  • Eminent property
  • but . . . landownership was widespread

5
Revolution changes the law of property
  • Frees the private ownership of land from indirect
    exuberances (manorial fees, eminent property
    rights, communal village practices, and church
    tithes) and establishes property in the modern
    sense. It most especially benefited the
    landowning peasants and the bourgeoisie.

6
Prerequisite of political unity
  • Unity gave rise to nationwide public opinion,
    nationwide agitation, nationwide policies, and
    nationwide legislation
  • Unity a prerequisite AND a cause of the
    Revolution
  • Central Europe lacked these conditions
  • People saluted eachother as citizen and shouted
    viva la nation!

7
Feudal reaction
  • In the 18th century, as a consequence of the
    resurgence of the aristocracy, manorial lords
    collected their dues more rigorously or revived
    old ones that had fallen into disuse
  • Main problem was that the property system no
    longer bore any relation to real economic
    usefulness or activity

8
Critical spirit of public opinion
  • Developed in salons, coffeehouses, and literary
    arguments spread rapidly into a developing public
    sphere of political debate
  • Campaigns appealed for public support in the name
    of reason, rights, or justice
  • In these ways the critical thought of
    Enlightenment culture entered into the political
    conflicts during the Old Regime

9
Revolution precipitated by a Financial Crisis
  • War costs overloaded the government
  • Although French debt was only half that of Great
    Britain, less than that of the Dutch Republic,
    and no greater than 1715, it could not be carried
    because revenues fell short of necessary
    expenditures
  • Repudiation of the debt was no longer an option,
    sure sign of the economic progress of well-to-do
    classes

10
The Calonne plan
  • Proposed a general tax to fall on all landowners,
    without exemption, instead of the taille
  • Lightening of indirect taxes and eliminating
    internal tariffs to stimulate the economy
  • Confiscation of some properties of church
  • Establishment of provincial assemblies of
    landowning interests without regard to estate

11
Calonne and Brienne plans fail
  • assembly of notables convened in 1787 but
    deadlocked over concessions, and king dismisses
    Calonne
  • Parlement of Paris blocks similar plan by Brienne
  • Brienne and Louis XVI try to replace the
    parlements which leads to revolt of nobles and
    their demand that the Estates General decide the
    issue of taxes
  • Provincial estates and parlements refuse to
    cooperate and government brought to standstill,
    political clubs active
  • King promises to call Estates General on July 5,
    1788

12
Aims of Nobility
  • By forcing the summoning of Estates General, the
    nobility actually initiated the Revolution
  • King requests advice on how Estates General
    should be organized, led to outburst of public
    discussion
  • Revolution begins as another aristocratic
    resurgence against the absolutism of the king
  • Although the nobles had a LIBERAL program, they
    hoped to govern France permanently through a
    Estates General, unthinkable to THIRD ESTATE

13
Third Estate
  • Wanted to avoid a permanent Estates General
  • Abbe Sieyes What is the Third Estate
  • Argued Nobility a useless caste and could be
    abolished without loss
  • Ideas of Rousseaus Social Contract entered
    thought of the Revolution
  • Class antagonisms poisoned the revolution and
    France has suffered from them over since

14
National Assembly
  • Formed over deadlock over bloc voting
  • June 17th Third Estate declares itself National
    Assembly
  • Tennis Court Oath June 20th (promise to write
    constitution)
  • Revolutionary act of assuming sovereign power!

15
Weakness of Louis XVI
  • Attempted to compromise and postpone a crisis
  • Failed to make use of the profound loyalty felt
    by the bourgeoisie and common people
  • Ultimately he chose to side with nobles, a break
    with tradition
  • Third Estate did not fear a return to the
    absolute monarchy, but a country controlled by
    nobility

16
Revolution spreads to lower classes
  • Bad harvests led to higher price of bread
  • Government paralyzed and unable to take measures
    of relief
  • Fear of brigands
  • Storming of the Bastille (July 14, 1789) saves
    Assembly
  • King now accepts situation orders nobles and
    clergy to join the National Assembly

17
The Great Fear of 1789
  • the brigands are coming
  • Great Fear became part of a general agrarian
    insurrection, in which peasants intended to
    destroy the manorial regime by force

18
Reforms of National Assembly
  • Night of August 4
  • Feudalism was abolished
  • Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen
    established principles of
  • Rule of law
  • Equal individual citizenship (except women)
  • Collective sovereignty of the people

19
Further reforms included in Constitution of 1791
  • 1789-1791 (also known as constituent assembly)
  • Abolishes Old Regime
  • Creates 83 equal departments, administration
    decentralized in reaction to royal bureaucracy
  • Local officials were to be elected
  • Created a unicameral elected assembly (called the
    Legislative Assembly) while king provided
    suspensive veto
  • Flight to Varennes destablizes the situation
    and weakens any movement for a strong executive

20
Counterrevolution gains strength
  • Count of Artois and other aristocrats emigrate to
    foreign parts
  • Emigres agitate abroad against the revolution
  • More conservative revolutionaries drop out of
    Assembly after seeing constitutional questions
    settled by mobs
  • In France, clubs organized to further reforms,
    most importantly, the Jacobins (middle class)

21
Active v. Passive Citizens
  • Limits placed on democratic rights
  • All citizens had equal civil rights
  • Only active citizens had the right to vote for
    electors
  • New political order was to develop through
    manly opposition to the feminine corruptions
    of the Old Regime
  • Women excluded from government institutions

22
Economic policies favor middle class
  • Public debt never disowned because owed mainly to
    middle class
  • Establish a new currency called assignats, and
    confiscated all Church land to back it
  • Sold land to raise money since tax collection was
    sporatic
  • Favored economic individualism and all guilds
    were abolished
  • Le Chaplier law (1791) banned trade organizations
    as well

23
New political culture nationalized the French
people
  • New flag
  • New forms of democratic language
  • New clothing
  • New festivals
  • New public monuments
  • Liberty trees
  • Liberty caps

24
Civil Constitution of the Clergy of 1790
  • Constituent Assembly regarded the Church as
    subordinate to the sovereign authority
  • Provided maintenance for church
  • Set up French national church
  • Parish priests and bishops elected
  • Paid salaries
  • Vatican denounces Civil Constitution and
    Revolution in general
  • Assembly required oaths leading to two churches,
    one public, one secret (refractory priests)

25
Constituent Assembly disbanded
  • Civil Constitution greatest tactical blunder of
    Revolution
  • French church, long enjoying Gallican liberties
    now turned to papacy
  • Created a constitutional monarchy in which a
    unicameral Legislative Assembly confronted a king
    unconverted to the new order
  • Ruled that none of its members could sit in
    Legislative Assembly
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